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Genetic studies for aquaculture and stock-enhancement of red drum (Sciaenops ocellatus)

Hypervariable, nuclear-encoded microsatellites were used to (i) estimate genetic
effective size (Ne) of red drum spawning over a two-week period in nine brood tanks at a
TPWD hatchery; (ii) estimate heritability of early-larval growth and of growth rate and
cold tolerance of juveniles; and (iii) test Mendelian segregation and independent
assortment of 31 nuclear-encoded microsatellites. Assuming all tanks contributed
equally to an offspring population, the maximum (expected) and observed Ne over the
nine brood tanks was 43.2 and 27.0, respectively. The estimate of Ne based on
observed variation in family size was 19.4. Simulations indicated that over a limited
time period the simplest approach to maximizing Ne for a release population would be to
utilize equal numbers of progeny from each brood tank. A family (genetic) effect was
found to contribute significantly to the variance in early larval growth, juvenile growth
rate, and cold tolerance. Estimates of narrow-sense heritability for these three traits
were 0.07 +- 0.03, 0.52 +- 0.21 and 0.20 +- 0.10 (two growth intervals measured), and 0.30 +- 0.11, respectively, under the genetic models employed. The relatively low estimate
of heritability for early larval growth suggests that genetic improvement for this trait
likely would be slow. The heritability estimates for juvenile growth rate and cold
tolerance, alternatively, suggest that genetic selection for these traits could be effective. Segregation at all 31 microsatellites fit Mendelian expectations for autosomal loci; a null
allele was inferred at two of the microsatellites. Results from pairwise tests of
independent assortment demonstrated that 20 of the 31 microsatellites could be placed
into seven linkage groups. Additional linkage groups inferred from a prior study
increased the number of inferred linkage groups in red drum to nine, with a range of two - five (avg. = 2.78) microsatellites in each linkage group. The remaining 11
microsatellites tested in this study assorted independently from all other microsatellites,
suggesting the possibility of 11 additional linkage groups.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/6012
Date17 September 2007
CreatorsMa, Liang
ContributorsGold, John R.
PublisherTexas A&M University
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Thesis, text
Format637843 bytes, electronic, application/pdf, born digital

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